Doyle v. Union Pacific Railway Co.

147 U.S. 413, 13 S. Ct. 333, 37 L. Ed. 223, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2171
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 30, 1893
Docket100, 101
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 147 U.S. 413 (Doyle v. Union Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doyle v. Union Pacific Railway Co., 147 U.S. 413, 13 S. Ct. 333, 37 L. Ed. 223, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2171 (1893).

Opinion

Me. Justice Shieas

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the early part of November, a. d. 1883, Marcella Doyle, a widow, with a family of six children, agreed with the Union Pacific Railway Company to occupy the company’s section-house, situated on the line of the railroad at or near Woodstock, in the county of Chaffee and State of Colorado, and to board at said section-house such section hands and other employés of the company as it should desire, at the rate of four and one half dollars per week, to be paid by the persons so to be boarded, and the company agreed to aid her in collecting her pay for such board by retaining the same for her out of the wages of the employés so to be boarded.

Mrs. Doyle moved with her children into the section-house, and continued in the discharge of her duties as boarding-house keeper until the 10th day of March, a. d. 1884, when a snow-slide overwhelmed the section-house, injured Mrs. Doyle, and crushed to death the six children residing with her.

Subsequently, Marcella Doyle brought, in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Colorado, two actions against the Union Pacific Railway Company, .one for her personal injuries, the other for damages suffered by her in the loss of her children, and which latter action was based on a statute of the State of Colorado.

The actions resulted in verdicts and judgments in favor of the defendant company,, and the cases have been brought to this court by writs of error. As the cases turn upon the same facts and principles of law, they can be disposed of together.

The record discloses that the facts of the case, as claimed by ■ the 'respective parties, and certain admissions by the defendant company, were stated in a bilí of exceptions, and upon which instructions by the court were, given which are made the subject of the assignments of error.

The bill of exceptions was as follows :

“ Be it remémbered that on the* trial of this cause, at the *415 November term a. d. 1886, of the said Circuit Court, the defendant admitted, and such admissions were received in evidence before the jury —

“ That the plaintiff was at the several times named in the complaint a. widow and the mother of the said Martin Doyle, Andrew Doyle, Christopher Doyle; Catharine Doyle, Marcella Doyle and Maggie Doyle, mentioned and named in the complaint as the children of the plaintiff, and as having each and all been killed by a snow-slide at Woodstock, in the month of March, a. d. 1884.

“ That her husband and the father of said children had died previously to their death; that each of said children was of the age and sex stated in the complaint; was each unmarried and had no child nor children, and had each lived with their said mother, making their home with her up to the time of their death, and were each then living with the plaintiff, aiding and assisting her in and about making a living, and in about her duties and labors in the keeping of the section-house .of the defendant at Woodstock, in the county of Chaffee and State of Colorado, where said children were killed ; that said children were all killed while in said section-house, on the 10th day of March, a. d. 1884, by a snow-slide, which then and there occurred from the mountain side above said section-house ; that said section-house was built and used by the defendant as and for a section-house and a place at which the section hands of the defendant, who. should work on said section, could board and lodge.

“ That on or about the 5th day of November, a. d. 1883, at the instance and request of the defendant and for the mutual benefit of herself and the defendant, the plaintiff undertook and'agreed with the defendant to keep for it, during its will and pleasure, its section-house situated at or near Woodstock, on the line of its railroad, in the county of Chaffee and State of Colorado; that by the said agreement between her and the defendant the plaintiff was to provide and furnish board at said section-house for such section hands and other employes of the defendant as it should desire, at the rate of four and one-half dollars per week, to be paid by the • persons so fur *416 nished with such board, but the defendant was to aid and assis.' the plaintiff in collecting her pay for such board by stopping and retaining the same for her out of the wages of those so furnished with such board; that plaintiff thereupon, to wit, on the said 5th day of November, a. d. 1883, moved into said section-house with her family and entered' upon, the discharge of her duties as the keeper thereof, and remained there in' the discharge of such duties until the occurrence of the snow-slide, on the 10th of March, a. d. 1884; that the defendant did not at any time notify or apprise the plaintiff or either of her said children or cause her or either of them to be notified or apprised of the danger of a snow-slide or snow-slides or of the liability of a.snow-slide or snow-slides at such place where said section-house then was or in that locality. And the plaintiff, further to maintain the issues on her part, introduced evidence tending to show that said section-house was a one-story frame building and was constructed in 1882, about the time that "aid railroad was first operated in that section of the country; was situated in the mountains, near the base of a high and steep mountain, and in a place subject to snow-slides and dangerous on that account; that the sides of the mountain at the base of .which was the house in question were marked by. the tracks of former snow-slides, but only those familiar with snow-slides and their effects would know what they meant; that the defendant was aware of said danger at and before the time it engaged the plaintiff to keep its said section-house; that the plaintiff and,her said children had never before resided in a region of country subject to snow-slides, and had no knowledge of snow-slides or of their indications or of the dangers incident thereto, and was not aware of the particular danger in question; that there was a prominence or hip on this mountain side, about ten or twelve hundred feet above the section-house, which cut off a view of the mountain side above said hip from the section-house or its immediate vicinity'; that above said hip there was a large depression or draw on the mountain side extending from said hip to the summit, into which great quantities of snow fell and drifted during the winter season of each year, thus tend *417 ing to create snow-slides of danger to persons in said section-house or its vicinity; that this danger was not apparent even to a person having knowledge of snow-slides and their causes without a view or examination of this mountain side above said hip; that the altitude of said' section-house was about 10,200 feet, and of the ¡Summit of said mountain nearly 12,000 feet; that the snow-fall there was great in the winter season of each year, and that depressions on the mountain side were filled with snow by drifting; that the snow-slide of' March 10th, 1884, which killed the said children, proceeded from this depression above said hip; that a snow-slide of less dimensions and of less scope and extent occurred there ih February, 1883, in the same place and from the same source, which reached to within about two hundred feet of said section-house and of which the defendant had knowledge at the time thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
147 U.S. 413, 13 S. Ct. 333, 37 L. Ed. 223, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doyle-v-union-pacific-railway-co-scotus-1893.